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Bloomberg News reports that JPMorgan will charge fintechs to access customer data.

Bloomberg News, citing sources familiar with the issue, reported Friday that JPMorgan Chase plans to charge fintech companies a fee for access to customer account data.

According to a report, the largest U.S. bank has sent pricing sheets outlining new charges to data aggregators, intermediaries who link banks to fintech platforms, outlining new costs that could vary depending on use cases, with payment focused firms facing higher fees.

JPMorgan Chase's spokesperson stated that "We have invested significant resources in creating a valuable, secure system to protect customer data."

"We have had productive discussions and are working with everyone in the ecosystem to ensure that we all make the necessary investments in infrastructure that keeps our customer safe."

This could have a negative impact on the business models of payment apps that rely on having free access to financial data from customers to complete transactions.

PayPal shares fell 6.3%. Block shares dropped 5.6%. Visa and Mastercard both lost 2.9% and 2.82%, respectively.

Bloomberg News reported that the new fees will be implemented later this year, but they are still subject to negotiation.

U.S. banks are pushing for a lighter regulatory regime under the Trump administration, versus regulations from the Biden era that were more strict on capital requirements. (Reporting and editing by Pooja Deai in Bengaluru, Prakhar Srivastava)

(source: Reuters)